The Free Press Journal

OXFORD JAB FAILS TO CURB SA VARIANT

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LONDON: British drugmaker AstraZenec­a has said its Covid-19 vaccine developed with the University of Oxford appeared to offer only limited protection against the mild disease caused by the South African variant of the virus, based on early data from a trial.

The jab showed significan­tly reduced efficacy against the 501Y.V2 viral variant, which is dominant in South

Africa, according to the randomised, double-blind study seen by the Financial Times on Saturday.

"A two-dose regimen of (the vaccine) did not show protection against the mild-moderate Covid-19 due to (the South African variant)," the study indicated. The study, with a relatively small sample size of more than 2,000 individual­s, hasn't yet been peer-reviewed and is due to be published on Monday. AstraZenec­a said it had not been able to properly ascertain the effect of the vaccine on severe disease and hospitalis­ation caused by the South African variant in the study given most of the participan­ts were young, healthy adults.

While all Covid-19 vaccines so far have largely held up against the B.1.1.7 variant that emerged in the UK, the strain that originated in South Africa has been more worrying, the report said.

Both Johnson & Johnson and Novavax have said their vaccines were less effective against the strain in clinical trials conducted in South Africa, the report said. Moderna, too, has said it will test a booster shot and a reformulat­ed vaccine to target the South African variant, af ter studies showed its vaccine was significan­tly less effective. BioNTech-Pfizer said their vaccine was slightly less effective in a lab study using a pseudoviru­s with some mutations from the 501Y.V2 variant, but have not published results of tests against the variant itself. The 501Y.V2 variant, dominant in South Africa, has recently been discovered in countries all over the world, including the US and the UK.

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